Erin Williams grew up amid the rich food culture of Bayview-Hunters Point, a San Francisco neighborhood where recipes play a vital role in celebrating the community鈥檚 shared heritage. Local restaurants and stores, with their specialty dishes, helped form her culinary tastes. But Erin鈥檚 biggest influence was her mother鈥檚 Creole-influenced cuisine. 鈥淚 always believed my mom was the best cook in the world,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I believed in feeding people with love. My mom fed the church her gumbo, her cornbread dressing. Everybody came over to pick up a plate at Thanksgiving.鈥
As an adult, seeking to give back to her neighborhood, Erin became a social worker. But food remained her true passion: 鈥淔eeding people is a love of helping people too,鈥 she says. After attending culinary school, she founded her own small catering business, WeFeastSF. She became an increasingly visible member of the local small-business community. She networked tirelessly.
That鈥檚 how Stacy Dickinson, Business Banking Area Manager and Executive Director of 麻豆视频鈥檚 San Jose office, first encountered her鈥攁t a local networking event, where Erin鈥檚 energy and fearlessness, and her pride in her product, made a strong impression. 鈥淪he comes out with her basket of jambalaya mix,鈥 Stacy recalls, 鈥渁nd she is literally selling it to every person at this event.鈥 It was clear, she says, that Erin 鈥渄idn't want to just cater. She didn't want to just sell at a farmer's market. Her goal was for a mass audience to enjoy her food.鈥
Stacy grew up in the Bay Area herself, and it鈥檚 her passion to find and develop local entrepreneurs. Small businesses, which employ about 360,000 workers in the city, play a vital, sustaining role in the economy of San Francisco. They also play a crucial role as both community and commercial hubs, and bolster the city鈥檚 cultural districts.
Over the course of the following months, Stacy kept in touch with Erin and offered advice. When Chase and the Golden State Warriors launched the Alley-Oop Accelerator, a small- business training and mentorship program, she immediately recruited Erin. The Accelerator brings together entrepreneurs from underserved local communities to learn how to grow their businesses. 鈥淲hen I told her about it, she got quiet,鈥 Stacy recalls. 鈥淭hen she said, 鈥業鈥檓 in. What do I do?鈥欌
For seven weeks, Erin attended workshops both in person and over Zoom鈥攁bout accessing capital, managing cash flow, marketing online and in person, pricing, and hiring. About fraud and cybersecurity and merchant services. Participants pitched their products every day to each other, to local business owners, and to workshop leaders. The objective was to implement what they were learning into their businesses immediately, in real time.
鈥淲e worked on the things we were lacking in,鈥 says Erin, who describes classes on financial literacy, taxes, sales projections, and using social media, among others. 鈥淭hey taught us how to redirect what鈥檚 working and what isn鈥檛, and how to create more revenue through what is聽working. They helped us connect with people at Chase Bank鈥 for additional guidance and prospective funding. 鈥淎nd we uplifted each other as a whole cohort.鈥 The program enabled her to focus her business plan for the first time. 鈥淚t made me rethink my demographics,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t made me find my lane鈥攂ecause I was in every lane.鈥
When the Accelerator鈥檚 participants were told that executives from the Warriors would join them on the last day of workshops, Erin decided to bring in a batch of her peach-cobbler nachos. This recipe is a twist on the pie her mother used to make (after extensive experimentation, Erin discovered that deconstructing the recipe helped maintain the crispness of the crust). 鈥淓verybody tried my nachos,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭hey were tearing it up, even people that didn鈥檛 like desserts. It was overwhelming.鈥 She boldly announced that her goal was to serve the nachos at the team鈥檚 home court, the Chase Center.
She was in luck. Erin applied for and was accepted into the arena鈥檚 F&B program, which features small businesses in the area; this allowed her to showcase her peach-cobbler and apple-pie nachos throughout the Warriors and Valkyries seasons.
鈥淚 think the program allowed her to continue to build her confidence,鈥 Stacy says. 鈥淣ow she goes for everything. And if they tell her no, she asks again.鈥 With 270,000 small business clients in the Bay Area, 麻豆视频 is committed to supporting local business owners and entrepreneurs at every stage of their journey. Stacy speaks with the program鈥檚 alumni regularly; she joins them at milestone events for their businesses. And the participants themselves stay in touch via social media. The Alley-Oop Accelerator鈥檚 next cohort will run in tandem with the Golden State Valkyries season. Going forward, Stacy says, the intention is to host the program at least twice a year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so important for these business owners to take a chance on themselves,鈥 Stacy says. 鈥淎nd this program creates the opportunity for people to do that.鈥
Erin is currently working to introduce her products into cafeterias at San Francisco public schools. She鈥檚 also pursuing the possibility of serving her nachos at Oracle Park, where the San Francisco Giants play.
The small businesses of her childhood helped shape Erin鈥檚 culinary ambitions and curiosity. Her goal now is to offer her products to the biggest possible audience. 鈥淚 want to be worldwide,鈥 she says, 鈥渋n all the stadiums.鈥
The testimonials are the sole opinions or experiences of those featured and not those of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. or any of its affiliates. These opinions or experiences may not be representative of what all may achieve. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. or any of its affiliates are not liable for decisions made or actions taken in reliance on any of the testimonial information provided.